Showing posts with label Christopher Oram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christopher Oram. Show all posts

Saturday, 27 November 2021

The Mirror and the Light

by Hilary Mantel and Ben Miles

seen at the Gielgud Theatre on 17 November 2021

This Royal Shakespeae Comany production, directed by Jeremy Herrin, is an adaptation of Hilary Mantel's novel of the same name, the third in her account of the life and career of Thomas Cromwell. The first two novels had been adapted by Mike Poulton for the RSC in 2014 (before I began my blog). Ben Miles as Cromwell and Nathaniel Parker as Henry VIII reprise their roles from the earlier plays, and are both excellent.

The novel is long (by far the longest of the three) and complex, as the final two years of Cromwell's life were full of intrigue and interest. Mantel also imagined his interior life, with many episodes of recollection from his boyhood and youth elaborating on scenes glimpsed in the early parts of Wolf Hall (the first book). Most of the introspection has perforce been stripped out, though glanced at in the play by the occasional appearance of Cromwell's father Walter and his principal mentor Cardinal Wolsey as ghostly figures, an idea that seems at times rather too camp to be effective.

The political struggles are wisely and competently simplified to concentrate on the demise of Henry's third queen Jane Seymour and the negotiations for the fourth marriage to Anna of Cleves. Famously this foundered on the king's displeasure at actually meeting his bride, but Mantel mischievously proposes that she also was less than enamoured at the unheralded arrival of a rather overbearing and by this time physically less than attracitve man. All this was well played in a versatile setting designed by Christopher Oram (inherited directly from the previous adaptations).

I have read the novel recently, and felt that this added some richness to the experience of watching the play, since some fleeting references resonated with my memories of the more extended treatment in the book. The play (and the book) suffer from a lack of tension since the outcome is hardly unknown; this inevitalby reduces the suspense. Of course, one could say the same thing about Shakespeare's history plays, though the plays in the more mature tetralogy (Richard II, the two parts of Henry IV and Henry V) are arguably more memorable for the investigation of character than for mere historical information. I am not sure that these Cromwell plays will prove of such long-lasting interest. There was, for example, no attempt to revive the first two plays to coincide with the arrival of this last part, though maybe such an ambitious project would have been considered were it not for the deleterious effects of the pandemic on theatrical life.

Saturday, 28 November 2015

The Winter's Tale

by William Shakespeare

seen by live streaming from the Garrick Theatre on 26 November 2015

This is the first play of six presented by the Kenneth Branagh company at the Garrick in the West End. Directed by Branagh with Rob Ashford, it features Kenneth Branagh as Leontes, Miranda Raison as Hermione, Hadley Fraser as Polixenes, John Shrapnel as Camillo, Michael Pennington as Antigonus, Judi Dench as Paulina, Jessica Buckley as Perdita and Tom Bateman as Florizel. The set and costume design is by Christopher Oram.

Dressed notionally in the late nineteenth century, the opening scenes in Sicilia show the court in Christmas mode with carols and an opulent tree, warm lighting keeping out the winter cold. But all soon turns sour as Leontes mistakes his wife's admittedly rather flirtatious friendliness towards Polixenes as a sign of her adultery. He becomes ragingly jealous, arraigns Hermione for treason, disowns the baby girl born to her in prison, and refuses all reproof, pained from the courtiers or furious from Paulina, until calamity strikes with the death of his son and Hermione's collapse.

Friday, 30 October 2015

Photograph 51

by Anna Ziegler

seen at the Noel Coward Theatre on 26 October 2015

Directed by Michael Grandage and designed by Christopher Oram, the play features Nicole Kidman as Rosalind Franklin, Stephen Campbell Moore as Maurice Wilkins, Edward Bennett as Francis Crick, Will Attenborough as James Watson, Joshua Silver as Ray Gosling and Patrick Kennedy as Don Caspar.

Set in the underground laboratories of Kings College London (on the Strand) in 1951-2, the play concerns the research of Dr Rosalind Franklin who was attempting to photograph DNA in order to determine its structure. Her approach was not to speculate, but to deduce from reliable observation. At the same time, in Cambridge, Crick and the American Watson were approaching the same problem by building models based on what they knew, hoping that intuition would help.